The Media

The Washington Herald

Margaret Tilden

Iron Lady: Very committed to the Herald and almost completely imperturbable.

Reasonable Authority Figure: In Season 4, she hears out Tom's story and provides him with the resources and legitimacy he needs to break the story surrounding Frank's betrayal of President Walker.

Hammerschmidt

Thomas "Tom" Hammerschmidt

"I won't be distracted by what's fashionable."

Portrayed By: Boris McGiver

Dismissing the now considerably shortens your future.

Editor-in-Chief for The Washington Herald.

Ascended Extra: Initially, Hammerschmidt is only a secondary character in Zoe Barnes' storyline. He operates as her antagonist and a cynical lesson about where moral integrity gets you in the Crapsack World of the show. He falls off the show entirely for a long time, with only sporadic appearances after the fourth episode. He returns in a major way during Season 4 after the death of Lucas; with experience and determination, he begins to tie together the truth behind Frank's rise to power and eventually establishes at least part of the Underwoods' criminal activity in the public eye. He's come closer than anyone to bringing Frank Underwood down, and Frank is very clearly terrified that Tom's activities will see an end to the Underwood legacy.

Being Good Sucks: Tom does his best to stick by his principles and treat his employees fairly. It gets him absolutely nowhere and ends with his dismissal. It's ultimately averted; it isn't easy, but Tom's principaled (albeit clever) approach gets him closer to taking Frank down than anyone else. Not Zoe or Lucas, both of whom have major moral failings.

The Bus Came Back: And how! After Lucas Goodwin's death in the attempted assassination of Frank, Hammerschmidt is the one who starts recruiting people who Frank betrayed, seeking to bring the man down.

Country Matters: And boy, does it. Calling Zoe this speeds up his downfall and ruins his reputation.

Death Glare: He gives several of these to Frank when they finally meet. He even glares at the TV when Frank is on doing a speech.

The Determinator: After Lucas dies, Tom investigates the original story from Lucas, Zoe, and Janine's initial investigation; then he goes to work bringing in practically anyone that Frank betrayed in order to expose him.

Expy: His exposure of Frank's abuses of power in season 4 comes off making Hammerschmidt seem like a bit of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the Washington Post reporters who exposed Richard Nixon's role in Watergate.

A Father to His Men: At the Herald, although he has no patience for traitors like Zoe. Also does his best to look into Lucas' story on Frank in Season 2. It doesn't result in much, though, as the tracks have been covered so much that Tom's findings make Lucas look like a paranoid Yandere looking for blame after Zoe's death.

Hero Antagonist: Becomes one in Season 4. Lucas' death motivates him to finally start to investigate Frank's schemes and blow the lid off everything he's done. But Frank is the Villain Protagonist of the show, making Tom this trope in relation.

Old Media Playing Catch-Up: The tragedy of his character is that Hammerschmidt isn't suited for the digital age, and is painfully aware that he's on the verge of being left behind. Ironically, his Good Old Ways style of investigation (sifting through information) is what finally cracks the Underwoods' cover-ups.

Shut Up, Hannibal!: Tom makes it clear he can't be seduced to the dark side by Frank's flowery justifications in a very succinct way.

Frank: We're all ruthless. We all destroy. But corruption? That's a matter of perspective.

Tom: No. It's a matter of law.

Wrong Genre Savvy: Deconstructed; while he's able to connect the dots regarding Frank's corruption and his role in dethroning Walker to steal the Presidency (and do it under Frank's radar so that he was unable to take steps to silence him, let alone stop him from going public with his proof), Hammerschmidt repeatedly tells anyone and everyone who will listen that he does not believe that Frank killed Zoe. Which, given the fact that Lucas was made into a pariah and condemned as mentally ill for saying the same thing, shows Hammerschmidt as being savvy enough to know that any attempt to bring down Frank has to close off any side trip into proving that Frank killed Zoe, in order to keep the conspiracy taint from making everyone ignore the actul evidence he had gathered on Frank's other crimes

Sean

Sean Jeffries

Portrayed By: Korey Jackson

An ambitious reporter at the Washington Herald working under Tom Hammerschmidt.

Dragon with an Agenda: Manages to, through some schmoozing, become the White House Deputy Communications Director

Angela

Angela

Portrayed By: Alexis Nicole Smith

A reporter at the Washington Herald and Tom Hammerschmidt's assistant.

The Mole/Office Romance: She is sleeping with Sean Jeffries. After Hammerschmidt fires Jeffries for snooping around in Hammerschmidt's notes, Jeffries also begins using Angela to keep tabs on Hammerschmidt's investigation into the Underwoods.

Lucas

Lucas Goodwin / John Carlyle

Portrayed By: Sebastian Arcelus

Maybethis nice guy doesn't finish last.

Editor of The Washington Herald and friend of Zoe Barnes.

Ascended Extra: He's more of a supporting character in the first season, but plays a bigger role later on.

The Bus Came Back: After being incarcerated midway through season 2, he's released into the Witness Protection Program in season 4. But an attempt to convince Dunbar to investigate Frank fails, and he dies trying to assassinate Frank.

Butt-Monkey: In a show packed to the brim with people subjected to terrible events, Lucas Goodwin just about edges out Rachel Posner for 'a shitty time'. He's rejected by Zoe Barnes repeatedly, winds up as her second choice, is driven to obsession by her death, loses his career, is dismissed by everyone (including his friends) as a lunatic despite being the only person who knows the truth, watches his hated enemy go from strength to strength and become the most powerful man in the free world, gets railroaded into prison, humiliates himself for his cellmate, is blackmailed into sexual acts by a grotesque man at the shitty rental car wash he's forced to work at under the terms of his parole, is once again dismissed as a lunatic by Heather Dunbar, fails to assassinate Frank, and his name will possibly go down in history as an unsuccessful Lee Harvey Oswald. It almost seems like the creators don't like him much at all.

Cassandra Truth: Knows the truth about Frank, but due to lack of evidence, no one believes him.

Guile Hero: The way he tracks down Rachel demonstrates impressive intelligence and resourcefulness.

Hero Antagonist: Becomes one toward the end of the first season; even more so in the second. While Lucas is a heroic character, he stands in opposition to Frank, the Villain Protagonist.

Intrepid Reporter: He has the makings of one, but isn't quite as willing to leave his morals at the door as the more successful Zoe.

Love Makes You Dumb: He's introduced as a level-headed & reasonably intelligent character, but his grief over Zoe's death in season 2 causes him to become a lot more impulsive and a lot less rational, to the point where he gets himself caught up in an FBI sting by getting involved with a shady hacker, and tries to assassinate Frank.

Nice Guys Finish Last: Is rejected by Zoe twice. Only after Frank Underwood has had his way with her for months, does she give him a chance. When he discovers that Zoe had an affair with Frank to help her own career, Lucas beings worry that his own relationship with Zoe only exists because she needs his help investigating Peter Russo's death.

Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!: His failed assassination attempt against Frank in season 4 not only gives Frank the necessary sympathy points to get the upper hand in the primaries (while causing Dunbar to have to take the heat), it also reconciled the Underwoods, who are considerably stronger together. Not to mention it gets Lucas killed. But the fact that he did caused Tom Hammerschmidt to start investigating Lucas' cyberterrorism conviction and, perhaps, do what Lucas could not: expose Frank's previous abuses of power.

Sanity Slippage: In Season 4, after his failed attempt to reach Dunbar. He ultimately decides he has nothing left to lose and tries to assassinate Frank.

Well-Intentioned Extremist: How he sees himself as, with no evidence of Frank's wrongdoing, Lucas decides to shoot Frank at a rally but only succeeds in wounding Frank, kills Meechum, and ends up shot dead himself. Naturally, he's painted in the media as simply a nutcase rather than the hero he sees himself as. However, his death does lead Tom Hammerschmidt to reopen the original story Lucas brought to him about Frank.

You Have to Believe Me: Goes to Dunbar in Season 4 to try and make her see how Frank is a ruthless killer but she writes him off as crazy. This leads him to try to assassinate Frank.

Janine

Janine Skorsky

"It's not worth fucking your way to the middle."

Portrayed By: Constance Zimmer

The pen issnarkier than the sword.

A veteran reporter who becomes jealous and suspicious of Zoe's sudden success at the Washington Herald. She later becomes an ally and even mentor to Zoe when Zoe recommends her for a job at Slugline, a popular freelance internet site.

Deadpan Snarker: One of the snarkiest and grumpiest characters in the series.

Green-Eyed Monster: Janine rapidly becomes deeply jealous of Zoe as her star rises. Ultimately, however, they settle into a slightly uncomfortable friendship.

My God, What Have I Done?: Blames herself for Lucas' death, since she wonders that if only she hadn't turned coward when Zoe died and fought on looking for the truth like Lucas did, he would still be alive since she would've been there to reign in his reckless behavior.

Not So Different: Janine reveals that like Zoe, she used to sleep with successful men to get inside information for stories, and even had an affair with a Congressman at one point in the past. However, she warns Zoe that a woman can only sleep her way so far up the ladder before she hits a brick wall].

Put on a Bus: She is scarcely involved in the second season at all before running off and establishing that she wants nothing to do with this anymore.

The Bus Came Back: Returns in Season 4 to mourn Lucas' death with Tom Hammerschmidt and confirm that Frank is indeed an evil bastard who committed all those crimes.

The Rival: To Zoe. Later Subverted, after they reach an understanding of one another and decide to become allies.

Screw This, I'm Outta Here!: After Zoe is killed, she's scared off by the risks of continuing to investigate the circumstances of Russo's death and decides to leave town.

Zoe Barnes

A reporter for The Washington Herald (later moving to Slugline following an altercation with her boss). After meeting Frank Underwood, she quickly forms an intimate relationship with him with both of them using each other for advancement in their careers, with Underwood using her to leak stories to hamper the progress of his opponents.

Anyone Can Die: Killed in the beginning of the second season, despite being one of the main characters of the first season.

Adaptational Villainy: Mattie Storin from the original series is a complete rube who's being manipulated from the start. Zoe, on the other hand, is using Frank just as much as he's using her.

Ambition Is Evil: Her hunger for success leads her to become increasingly morally compromised.

Fatal Flaw: In Season 2, Frank is once again able to tempt Zoe into pursuing her ambitious side. Then he kills her.It is left unclear whether or not Zoe had genuinely "relapsed" into working for Frank or if she was simply trying to lure him into revealing something damning about Russo's death. Either way it doesn't matter, as part of her gambit she deletes all evidence of her contact with him and confirms that she knows too much, leaving absolutely no reason for Frank to leave her alive.

Hollywood Beaty Standards: Zoe is telegenic on TV, and discovers she likes doing that (and screwing her source) better than being a newspaper reporter.

Make It Look Like an Accident: Pushed in front of a subway train because of her continued pursuit in Russo's death. Security camera footage makes it look like she either jumped or tripped. Frank pushes her himself to boot.

Sacrificial Lion: In case Russo's death still left doubt in anybody's mind, Zoe's paints a pretty clear picture that nobody is safe.

Single Woman Seeks Good Man: She starts a relationship with Lucas - whom she had twice rejected earlier - after the fling with Frank ends. Possibly a subversion, however, because Lucas wonders if he's just being used once he finds out that Zoe is not above sleeping with someone to advance her career.

Other Journalists

Ayla Sayyad

Intrepid Reporter: An extremely competent reporter and she does not give a fuck if a multi-billionaire threatens her. Unfortunately, she goes too far when she practically attacks Frank at a press conference, resulting in her dismissal from the White House.

Kate

Kate Baldwin

"A storm has been forming. Not for weeks, but for decades. It's name is not Faith; it's Francis. The entire nation is in his path, and if we ignore the warnings, then we have no one but ourselves to blame."

Portrayed By: Kim Dickens

A Pulitzer winning journalist for The Wall Street Telegraph. She replaces Ayla Sayyad as the Telegraph's White House correspondent.

Closer to Earth: Definitely more than Yates. Kate may not understand why Yates considers comparing her rejected articles to his killed book about Underwood a blasphemy, but she does understand why no sane politician would want such a biography written about himself.

Intrepid Reporter: Even more so than Ayla, whose place she takes. Frank chews out Seth for "kicking out the pitbull and making way for the dragon".

Joker Immunity: She notes right to Seth's face that she can pretty much write whatever she wants about Underwood, knowing he won't risk kicking out two female reporters from the same paper.

Sex for Services: Yet again. She's even willing to sleep with Frank's biographer if that's what it takes.

Lobbyists

Marty

Martin "Marty" Spinella

Portrayed By: Al Sapienza

A teachers' union lobbyist.

Arch-Enemy: Frank's, as the first season goes on. He's really the only character that season who's capable of putting up anything like a fight against Frank's political virtuosity.

Hero Antagonist: To Frank. All Spinella wants is a fair deal for the teachers, and Frank does not treat him well.

Hot-Blooded: Frank describes him as having a temper, and ultimately takes advantage of it.

Mistreatment-Induced Betrayal: Frank treats him with no respect, heading back to his hometown and only halfheartedly communicating via phone on a crucial deal. When Frank straight-up lies to him, that's when Spinella decides he's had enough.

Starter Villain: He's the first real opponent Frank faces in his plots, but is small fry compared to what awaits him the higher he goes.

Worthy Opponent: Although Frank treats him with little respect, he does acknowledge that Marty is not a good enemy to have and is quite reasonably worried about what Spinella might do, especially since Frank can't smooth-talk Marty like he does others.

Frank: Marty and I have a good working relationship. Or used to. You can see he has a temper, but I can usually cut through that and reason with him. But I may have pushed him too far, which is worrisome. Friends make the worst enemies.

Businessmen

Tusk

Raymond Alan Tusk

"The rational and the irrational complement each other. Individually, they're far less powerful."

Big Bad: He was the one who convinced President Walker to screw over Underwood and deny him the position of Secretary of State, sparking the events of the series. He eventually becomes the series' main antagonist during season two.

Beard of Sorrow/Beard of Evil: In Season 1, he starts out with a authoritarian-style mustache. As his competition with Frank grows increasingly fierce and dirty mid-way through Season 2, he starts growing a full beard. This serves to highlight the loss of his original pragmatic motives and his growing obsession with defeating Frank.

Expy: Of both Warren Buffet and George Hearst, McRaney's character in Deadwood, right down to growing a beard midway through the second season he appears in.

Final Boss: Of the first season. He's the first opponent Frank faces who is as cunning and cynical, and who thinks as big as Frank does and is the last remaining obstacle to Frank joining the ticket as VP.

First-Name Basis: He addresses President Walker as 'Garrett' instead of 'Mr. President' as a mark of how he doesn't actually respect him. After Walker grows a spine later on, Tusk switches to 'Mr. President, albeit reluctantly.

The Gloves Come Off: In the beginning he merely attempts to keep Frank in check. After Frank throws one wrench too many into his plans, he starts realizing what a ruthless and antagonistic man he is dealing with and starts answering in kind. It eventually comes to the point where Tusk gradually starts to lose sight of his original goal of just protecting his business interests, and instead becomes more and more obsessed with publicly humiliating Frank and destroying his career.

Kick the Dog: His most viscerally blatant act of evil is when he casually crushes one of his pet birds in his hand.

The Man Behind the Man: He's been an adviser for Walker for 20 years, remaining in the shadows as he never actually held a public office. It was Tusk who prevented Walker from naming Frank Secretary of State.

N.G.O. Superpower: Subverted. As Frank points out, while Sancorp possesses considerable influence on American government, "If you add all their billions together, you get the GDP of Slovakia."

No Celebrities Were Harmed: As a self-made billionaire from the Midwest who still lives in his first house, he has a few traits in common with Warren Buffett.

The Rival: Goes toe-to-toe with Frank Underwood all during Season 2, and loses.

Self-Made Man: Like Frank, though he has attained money rather than power.

Taking You with Me: Implicates Walker in corruption charges once it becomes clear he himself will be convicted.

The Bus Came Back: Reappears in Season 4 to help the United States with the negotiations with Russia.

Unknown Rival: Frank has no idea that one man is behind Walker not naming him to Secretary of State, or that the same man is watching his progress through the first season.

Unwitting Instigator of Doom: By convincing Walker not to name Frank to Secretary of State like he promised, Tusk inadvertently kicks off the events of the series, including several murders and the downfall of Walker and his administration. Tusk admits to Frank his recommendation was based on Frank being more useful in his current position, but he's proven himself more powerful than Tusk thought.

Villainous Breakdown: He's utterly stunned when Walker hangs up on him; the first time he's done so in 20 years. As season 2 progresses, Tusk becomes increasingly unhinged and quick-tempered.

Only in It for the Money: To stem the flow of laundered money from Lanagin's casino, Frank offers Lanagin access and favor with the president. Lanagin dismisses this offer, pointing out the fact that Tusk's money is far more measurable than Underwood's word.

Politically Incorrect Villain: He claims not to trust any white man, in those exact words, particularly those who work in the White House. However, given that he's dealing with Frank Underwood, and the strenuous historical relationship between Native American communities and the US Government, it's hard not to see why.

Depraved Bisexual: His very first scene is a threesome with a man and a woman; they take turns pleasuring him while he's tied up and asphyxiating.

Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain: Borderline example. He does plenty of ugly things, and he is the designated front man for a totalitarian regime that outdoes everything on the show put together by several orders of magnitude. However, he's just a minor cog in that machine and woefully out of his depth dealing with people who are even worse than he is and more cunning. And in the end, the "front man for a totalitarian regime" bit may be another source of pity, as it becomes incredibly obvious how they will reward his failure.

Oh, Crap!: He has this expression after he finds out he's being sent back to China after Frank revokes his asylum.

Small Name, Big Ego: Presents himself as an important and powerful representative of business in China. But as Season 2 goes on, it becomes clear how helpless and powerless he is in the grand scheme of things.

Smug Snake: While he's certainly got influence and wealth to his name, he's nowhere near as important or powerful as he likes to think he is.

You Have Out Lived Your Usefulness: Feng mentions during Season 2 how businessmen like him are quickly replaced if they fail their jobs for China and implies that they're usually assassinated.

Grant

Benjamin Grant

Portrayed By: Daniel Sauli

The head of Pollyhop, an internet company and search engine, and a supporter of Conway.

The Mole: Is initially indicated to be this, as he gives Frank a USB drive containing audio of Conway's Freak Out! aboard his private jet. It later turns out that Usher was actually the one who orchestrated the exchange, but Grant agreed to act as the go-between after realising that Conway would be a disaster as president.

Law enforcement

Green

Nathan Green

Portrayed By: Jeremy Holm

The White House/FBI liaison, later Deputy Director.

The Bully: To Gavin Orsay, his informant. Green is excessively cruel to him, frequently taunting and insulting him.

Military

General Dalton McGinnis

Portrayed By: Peter Bradbury

A decorated US Marine General, with a list of dark crimes on his resume.

Jerkass: When he meets his rape victim, he only smugly jokes with her.

Laser-Guided Karma: Claire, who was one of his first or maybe the first of his rape victims, outs him as a rapist on national television. Other victims come out of the woodwork and McGinnis ends up sentenced to 40 years in prison. Considering his age, he'll likely be in prison for the rest of his life. His reputation and career is utterly destroyed.

Serial Rapist: McGinnis brutally raped Claire in college, and raped Megan when they were in the military. It's all but outright stated that he's been raping women who are subordinate to him for decades.

Small Role, Big Impact: McGinnis only appears once on-screen, but his name is mentioned frequently and he's had a huge impact on the lives of Claire and Megan. Claire's outing of him leads to a subplot involving the attempt to pass a bill regarding sexual assault in the military.

Hennessey

Megan Hennessey

Portrayed By: Libby Woodbridge

A former US Marine Private who was sexually assaulted by General Dalton McGinnis.

Broken Bird: As result of her sexual assault, she's become increasingly unstable.

Rape as Drama: Her entire storyline stems from her assault at the hands of McGinnis. The impact on her life is thoroughly explored; she's seen to be filled with self-loathing, guilt, trauma, confusion and fear. Hennessey is a very tormented soul.

Sanity Slippage: After the bill she tried to get passed gets thrown away, she becomes a shell of her former self.

Civilians

Rachel

Rachel Posner

Portrayed By: Rachel Brosnahan

A prostitute dragged into Underwood's plans by Doug Stamper and whose life grows increasingly complicated as a result.

Abusive Parents: It's very heavily implied that her father was abusive in some way.

Bi the Way: She starts a same sex relationship with a woman named Lisa in the second season.

Breakout Character: In the initial stages of the show, Rachel was only ever intended to appear in the first episode, hence why they didn't bother giving her a different name from her actress. But they were so enchanted by Brosnahan's acting that they greatly expanded her role, leading Rachel into being one of the few non-political characters to make significant appearances in the second season.

Broken Bird: She has quite a messy history, involving dropping out of school, running away from home, and some form of abuse on the part of her father that precipitated both. All of these things have taken a heavy emotional toll on her.

Bury Your Gays: Killed off after spending most of two seasons as a victim.

Death In The Limelight: Most of the Season 3 Finale covers where Rachel has been and what kind of life she was living, before Doug Stamper found and killed her.

The Dog Bites Back: After practically being held prisoner by Doug Stamper during Season 2, Rachel catches him off guard, nearly kills him in the form of a rock to Stamper's head, and takes his car.

Hooker with a Heart of Gold: Deconstructed. She is an essentially decent person whom teachers describe as highly intelligent, comes from a broken home, and desperately wants to leave prostitution behind. The show illustrates just how little control she has and how desperate her situation is and just how resigned to it all she has become.

Hope Spot: Her pleas in the last episode of Season 3 get to Doug and he let's her go... only to change his mind several minutes later, turn the car and go back to kill her.

Morality Pet: For Doug Stamper, who treats her with some kindness when he doesn't really have to. Ultimately it's subverted, as Doug becomes increasingly obsessed with her.

Oh, Crap!: Her final expression, when she realizes Doug's changed his mind after all.

Retirony: Planned to save up money, so she can get a new identity and save up for a car. She was able to pay for a new identity before she gets found and killed by Doug Stamper.

Shoot the Dog: After spending most of season 3 offscreen, she gets A Day in the Limelight in the s3 finale, only for Stamper to show up and kidnap her with the intent of murdering her. After she pleads with him to let her go, he does so... only to change his mind, turn back, kill her and bury her in the desert.

Spanner in the Works: Subverted, in the Season 3 Finale. Doug Stamper is able to track down and kill Rachel, eliminating the last loose end that could expose Frank as a murderer.

Tempting Fate: She reveals her plan of saving up for a car and moving on with her life during the Season 3 Finale. She is killed by Doug Stamper at the end of the episode.

Freddy

Frederick "Freddy" Hayes

"I ain't one for lookin' back. Eyes ahead."

Portrayed By: Reg E. Cathey

"I can't take back the bad I done. All I can do is to make my own way, like I been doin'."

Becoming the Mask: In Season 3, Freddy admits to Remy in secret that he pretty much does this whenever Frank comes around, even going as far back as when he had his restaurant.

Black Best Friend: He might be one of Frank's best and most genuine friends. Played with in Season 3. Freddy admits to Remy that his friendly behavior towards Frank is mostly an act, and he even admits that he used to hide all the time in the kitchen back when he had his restaurant. And he took the landscaping job at the White House to keep his distance from Frank. Subverted in Season 4. Freddy tells Frank how much he really disliked him all along. And he makes it clear to Tom Hammerschmidt after beating him up that he hates Frank Underwood.

The Bus Came Back: When he signs up for America Works in Season 3, leading to Frank reuniting with him.

Shows up again in Season 4 to tell Frank that he's leaving Washington for good but not before finally telling him what he really thinks of him.

Dark and Troubled Past: Before being known for making the best ribs in Washington D.C, Freddy was a gangbanger in his youth and was possibly responsible for the murder of two elderly people. After he had his son, he got caught and imprisoned, never able to be a father to him. As a result, his son grew up in the gang life and became a drug addict. And now the cycle seems to be continuing with his grandson.

Kick the Dog: Freddy beating the ever living daylights out of Hammerschmidt for trying to get dirt on Frank, despite Freddy having every reason to rat out the bastard. While he claims that he's no snitch, still a dick move to do.

Local Hangout: Frank has been a regular for about 20 years and always overtips. Whenever they need food delivered it's usually from Freddy's.

Morality Pet: He's the one person that Frank is always nice and kind to regardless of the situation, and Frank's eventual abandonment of Freddy is treated as a Moral Event Horizon. Even Frank, who has shrugged off two murders, is upset by it.

No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: Freddy's problems in Season 2 begins after he tries to reach out and save his son and grandson, believing the franchise deal he made will make lots of money to get them both out of the Hood.

Precision F-Strike: Lays into Frank hard when he's finally had enough of the man's underlying condescension.

"You're a motherfucker, Mr. President."

Rant-Inducing Slight: Though he had already lost any affection he had for Frank and was planning to leave Washington, Frank's casual suggestion that he should come to the White House and cook ribs for him is what finally causes him to completely lose his shit with Frank, give him a "The Reason You Suck" Speech and storm out for good.

Shoot the Shaggy Dog: Being humble and treating Frank on a first name basis as a loyal customer ends up being his downfall. After receiving positive publicity for his restaurant, his attempts to bring his son out of poverty from an investor's offer to franchise his restaurant fails when his past are exposed by Raymond Tusk and his son reacts violently under media pressure.

Sliding Scale of Idealism vs. Cynicism: Freddy becomes more cynical after he loses his restaurant, to the point that he lectures his grandson on not having "fantasies". He also gains a somewhat jaded view of his relationship with Frank, and while being as cordial with him as always, he reveals to Remy that he gets tired of Frank's babbling and is mostly just savvy enough to humor the latter with company for practical reasons.

Gillian

Gillian Cole

Portrayed By: Sandrine Holt

The leader of a grass-roots organization called World Well that provides clean water to developing countries. Through the Clean Water Initiative, she grapples with Frank and Claire's interests.

Beware the Nice Ones: When her relationship with Claire sours, she becomes very vindictive and calculating. Even Claire is surprised with how deeply angry Gillian becomes.

Bullying a Dragon: She tries to put Claire on trial, but is entirely unprepared for her capacity for cruelty.

The Idealist: Gillian goes into work with Claire under the honest and pure belief that because she's working for a charity, everyone will be charitable. Ultimately, Claire brutally disabuses her of this notion.

Gavin Orsay

A computer hacker turned reluctant FBI informant. His empathy for fellow hackers who have been imprisoned and the people he is forced to sabotage through coercion by the FBI is in conflict with his own desire for self-preservation and escape.

Anti-Villain: Gavin is actually a fairly nice guy who is loyal to his friends, adores his guinea pig and would only like to be free of charges and preferably escape abroad. He doesn't really want to betray Lucas or Lisa nor get Rachel's psychotic stalker on her trail, but his or his friends' situations don't leave him much as of a choice.

Lucas:You think you're a badass because you're on some vigilante anarchist kick? At least I have the balls to put my name on the work I do.

Gavin: You've never faced 100 years in prison, you self-righteous prick! Most of my friends are in prison, rotting away, because they poked the bear one too many times. Why? Because they wanted to expose government surveillance, the PRISM program, embezzlement, abuse, fucking torture, lies! You're a journalist? Who gives a shit? We're fucking soldiers. It's personal for me now. I don't have a choice, but you still do.

Butt-Monkey: The guy never catches a break. The way Nathan Green treats him is nothing short of horrible - he's bullied, harassed and threatened. Then, after blackmailing Green at the end of Season 2 he lands a job in FBI and is supposedly safe. Then he's threatened again and it's implied he's gonna get arrested. Then he finally gets to get away abroad... only to being found by Doug again, receiving a beating and death-threat from him.

The Dog Bites Back: He does get to hack into AT&T's servers and uses this knowledge to blackmail Nathan Green.

Too Dumb to Live: He was trying to save his friend from going to prison, but after closing Rachel's case with Doug and escaping the country Gavin really should sit quiet. Reaching out to Doug, informing him that he was lied to about Rachel's death and trying to blackmail him into more favors was definitely not a smart move.

What Happened To The Guinea Pig: Averted. If there was a question, what would happen to Cashew if Gavin got himself arrested or killed, or managed to finally get the hell out of there, it gets answered: he leaves her to Lisa.

Adam

Adam Galloway

"We're not your chess pieces."

Portrayed By: Ben Daniels

A photographer who lives a Bohemian lifestyle in New York City, and who is Claire's on and off lover.

Butt-Monkey: He's fairly happy in Season 1, occupying the periphery of Claire's storyline. In Season 2, he goes through absolute hell in the course of one episode: he's repeatedly blackmailed and manipulated by the Underwoods and Tusk until he's left absolutely distraught and full of rage.

Intimate Artistry: The affair he carries on with Claire involves a fair deal of photography, mostly of an explicit (but classy) nature. Raymond Tusk uses these photographs in an attempt to expose the affair and damage the image of the Underwoods; the Underwoods explain away the romantic overtones of the pictures as being a private, romantic gift taken with Frank's prior awareness.

Nice Guy: He might be involved the other man in an adulterous relationship, but other than that he's a pleasant and considerate man who claims to have never hated anyone...before Claire, that is.

Perma-Stubble: Adam is usually seen with some light stubble, in keeping with his Bohemian character.

"The Reason You Suck" Speech: He gives a brief one to Claire, who is hardly a hero and therefore isn't perturbed much. Were it directed at anyone other than an Underwood, it would have been emotionally devastating.

"Because of you I will always be the man who placed her father in danger. I can never erase that. I'm sorry I ever met you. All you've ever done is cause me pain. And you're fucking with my life and the life of the woman that I love more than I ever loved you."

Lisa Williams

Portrayed By: Kate Lyn Sheil

A social worker who befriends Rachel Posner, and later becomes her girlfriend. She later befriends Gavin Orsay.

Break the Cutie: She's a nice person trying to reach out to, befriend and help complete strangers, but it results in first being left by her girlfriend without any explanation and then tricked by a new "friend" who was faking having a broken heart and AIDS to win her pity in order to gather information about the aforementioned girlfriend. By Season 5 she's shown to still be hurt from what happened with Rachel which has led to her becoming addicted to heroin.

Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Her becoming deceived by the desperate hacker chiefly contributes to her ex-girlfriend Rachel's death. Though it could still end well, had Gavin the sense not to fuck with Stamper any more after lying to him about Rachel being dead originally.

Paul

Paul Capra

Portrayed By: Wass Stevens

A senior union official in South Philadelphia and a friend of Peter Russo's. He was the main campaigner against the closing of the Philadelphia shipyard.

"I thought we grew up together. But this guy sitting, behind his big desk? I don't even know who the fuck he is. Where's the Pete Russo who knew how to throw a punch when his back was against the wall? That guy was my friend."

Gary Stamper

Doug Stamper's brother. Despite being somewhat estranged from his brother, Gary is fiercely loyal, and moves in with Doug when he is in recovery. He has two children, Frankie and Clinton.

Sibling Yin-Yang: Gary is the complete opposite of Doug in many areas. While Doug is cold and distant, Gary is warm and inviting. While Doug lives alone and prefers it that way, Gary is happily married with a son and daughter. While Doug suffers from many addictions and mental issues, Gary seems to be mentally stable and free of any addictions.

Eddis

Bishop Charles Eddis

A Christian official. Bishop Eddis performed the funeral service in Arlington Cemetery for the three American soldiers who were killed in the Jordan Valley. Frank Underwood later met with him for spiritual guidance at the National Cathedral

Cool Old Guy: He's a motorcycle-riding, devout yet cynical bishop who talks to Frank at his level.

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